Characterizing brain tau and cognitive decline along the amyloid timeline in Alzheimer's disease

被引:9
|
作者
Cody, Karly A. [1 ,2 ]
Langhough, Rebecca E. [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Zammit, Matthew D. [1 ,4 ,5 ]
Clark, Lindsay [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Chin, Nathaniel [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Christian, Bradley T. [1 ,4 ,5 ]
Betthauser, Tobey J. [1 ,2 ,5 ]
Johnson, Sterling C. [1 ,2 ,3 ,6 ]
机构
[1] Univ Wisconsin, Wisconsin Alzheimers Dis Res Ctr, Sch Med & Publ Hlth, Madison, WI 53792 USA
[2] Univ Wisconsin, Dept Med, Sch Med & Publ Hlth, Madison, WI 53792 USA
[3] Univ Wisconsin, Sch Med & Publ Hlth, Wisconsin Alzheimers Inst, Madison, WI 53792 USA
[4] Univ Wisconsin, Waisman Lab Brain Imaging & Behav, Madison, WI 53792 USA
[5] Univ Wisconsin, Dept Med Phys, Madison, WI 53792 USA
[6] Univ Wisconsin, Wisconsin Alzheimers Dis Res Ctr, Clin Sci Ctr, Sch Med & Publ Hlth, 600 Highland Ave K6-438, Madison, WI 53792 USA
基金
美国国家卫生研究院;
关键词
amyloid-PET; tau-PET; Alzheimer's disease; NATIONAL INSTITUTE; ASSOCIATION WORKGROUPS; DIAGNOSTIC GUIDELINES; HYPOTHETICAL MODEL; IMPAIRMENT; DEPOSITION; DEMENTIA; RISK; BETA; MRI;
D O I
10.1093/brain/awae116
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
Recent longitudinal PET imaging studies have established methods to estimate the age at which amyloid becomes abnormal at the level of the individual. Here we recontextualized amyloid levels into the temporal domain to better understand the downstream Alzheimer's disease processes of tau neurofibrillary tangle (NFT) accumulation and cognitive decline. This cohort study included a total of 601 individuals from the Wisconsin Registry for Alzheimer's Prevention and Wisconsin Alzheimer's Disease Research Center that underwent amyloid and tau PET, longitudinal neuropsychological assessments and met clinical criteria for three clinical diagnosis groups: cognitively unimpaired (n = 537); mild cognitive impairment (n = 48); or dementia (n = 16). Cortical C-11-Pittsburgh compound B (PiB) distribution volume ratio (DVR) and sampled iterative local approximation were used to estimate amyloid positive (A+; global PiB DVR > 1.16 equivalent to 17.1 centiloids) onset age and years of A+ duration at tau PET (i.e. amyloid chronicity). Tau PET burden was quantified using F-18-MK-6240 standardized uptake value ratios (70-90 min, inferior cerebellar grey matter reference region). Whole-brain and region-specific approaches were used to examine tau PET binding along the amyloid timeline and across the Alzheimer's disease clinical continuum. Voxel-wise F-18-MK-6240 analyses revealed that with each decade of A+, the spatial extent of measurable tau spread (i.e. progressed) from regions associated with early to late NFT tau stages. Regional analyses indicated that tau burden in the entorhinal cortex was detectable, on average, within 10 years of A+ onset. Additionally, the entorhinal cortex was the region most sensitive to early amyloid pathology and clinical impairment in this predominantly preclinical sample. Among initially cognitively unimpaired (n = 472) individuals with longitudinal cognitive follow-up, mixed effects models showed significant linear and non-linear interactions of A+ duration and entorhinal tau on cognitive decline, suggesting a synergistic effect whereby greater A+ duration, together with a higher entorhinal tau burden, increases the likelihood of cognitive decline beyond their separable effects. Overall, the amyloid time framework enabled a spatiotemporal characterization of tau deposition patterns across the Alzheimer's disease continuum. This approach, which examined cross-sectional tau PET data along the amyloid timeline to make longitudinal disease course inferences, demonstrated that A+ duration explains a considerable amount of variability in the magnitude and topography of tau spread, which largely recapitulated NFT staging observed in human neuropathological studies. By anchoring disease progression to the onset of amyloid, this study provides a temporal disease context, which may help inform disease prognosis and timing windows for anti-amyloid therapies.
引用
收藏
页码:2144 / 2157
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Braak Stage, Cerebral Amyloid Angiopathy, and Cognitive Decline in Early Alzheimer's Disease
    Malek-Ahmadi, Michael
    Perez, Sylvia E.
    Chen, Kewei
    Mufson, Elliott J.
    JOURNAL OF ALZHEIMERS DISEASE, 2020, 74 (01) : 189 - 197
  • [22] Changes in Plasma Amyloid and Tau in a Longitudinal Study of Normal Aging, Mild Cognitive Impairment, and Alzheimer's Disease
    Chen, Ting-Bin
    Lai, Yu-Hua
    Ke, Ting-Ling
    Chen, Jun-Peng
    Lee, Yi-Jung
    Lin, Szu-Ying
    Lin, Po-Chen
    Wang, Pei-Ning
    Cheng, Irene H.
    DEMENTIA AND GERIATRIC COGNITIVE DISORDERS, 2019, 48 (3-4) : 180 - 195
  • [23] Alzheimer's disease pattern of brain atrophy predicts cognitive decline in Parkinson's disease
    Weintraub, Daniel
    Dietz, Nicole
    Duda, John E.
    Wolk, David A.
    Doshi, Jimit
    Xie, Sharon X.
    Davatzikos, Christos
    Clark, Christopher M.
    Siderowf, Andrew
    BRAIN, 2012, 135 : 170 - 180
  • [24] Synergistic associations of amyloid-β and phosphorylated tau with tau aggregation and cognitive decline in Alzheimer's disease
    Zhang, Chunhua
    Tai, Yaojun
    Kong, Min
    Jia, Pengyuan
    Ma, Guozhao
    Ba, Maowen
    JOURNAL OF ALZHEIMERS DISEASE, 2025, : 1036 - 1044
  • [25] Combining tau-PET and fMRI meta-analyses for patient-centered prediction of cognitive decline in Alzheimer's disease
    Biel, Davina
    Luan, Ying
    Brendel, Matthias
    Hager, Paul
    Dewenter, Anna
    Moscoso, Alexis
    Svaldi, Diana Otero
    Higgins, Ixavier A.
    Pontecorvo, Michael
    Roemer, Sebastian
    Steward, Anna
    Rubinski, Anna
    Zheng, Lukai
    Schoell, Michael
    Shcherbinin, Sergey
    Ewers, Michael
    Franzmeier, Nicolai
    ALZHEIMERS RESEARCH & THERAPY, 2022, 14 (01)
  • [26] Repetitive negative thinking is associated with amyloid, tau, and cognitive decline
    Marchant, Natalie L.
    Lovland, Lise R.
    Jones, Rebecca
    Binette, Alexa Pichet
    Gonneaud, Julie
    Arenaza-Urquijo, Eider M.
    Chetelat, Gael
    Villeneuve, Sylvia
    ALZHEIMERS & DEMENTIA, 2020, 16 (07) : 1054 - 1064
  • [27] A conceptual framework for research on subjective cognitive decline in preclinical Alzheimer's disease
    Jessen, Frank
    Amariglio, Rebecca E.
    van Boxtel, Martin
    Breteler, Monique
    Ceccaldi, Mathieu
    Chetelat, Gael
    Dubois, Bruno
    Dufouil, Carole
    Ellis, Kathryn A.
    van der Flier, Wiesje M.
    Glodzik, Lidia
    van Harten, Argonde C.
    de Leon, Mony J.
    McHugh, Pauline
    Mielke, Michelle M.
    Molinuevo, Jose Luis
    Mosconi, Lisa
    Osorio, Ricardo S.
    Perrotin, Audrey
    Petersen, Ronald C.
    Rabin, Laura A.
    Rami, Lorena
    Reisberg, Barry
    Rentz, Dorene M.
    Sachdev, Perminder S.
    de la Sayette, Vincent
    Saykin, Andrew J.
    Scheltens, Philip
    Shulman, Melanie B.
    Slavin, Melissa J.
    Sperling, Reisa A.
    Stewart, Robert
    Uspenskaya, Olga
    Vellas, Bruno
    Visser, Pieter Jelle
    Wagner, Michael
    ALZHEIMERS & DEMENTIA, 2014, 10 (06) : 844 - 852
  • [28] Alzheimer's Disease and Cognitive Decline in Patients with Cardiovascular Diseases Along the Heart-Brain Axis
    Trieu, Calvin
    van Harten, Argonde C.
    Leeuwis, Anna E.
    Exalto, Lieza G.
    Hooghiemstra, Astrid M.
    Verberk, Inge M. W.
    Allaart, Cor P.
    Brunner-La Rocca, Hans-Peter
    Kappelle, L. Jaap
    van Oostenbrugge, Robert J.
    Biessels, Geert-Jan
    Teunissen, Charlotte E.
    van der Flier, Wiesje M.
    JOURNAL OF ALZHEIMERS DISEASE, 2024, 98 (03) : 987 - 1000
  • [29] Subjective cognitive decline: preclinical manifestation of Alzheimer's disease
    Lin, Yan
    Shan, Pei-Yan
    Jiang, Wen-Jing
    Sheng, Can
    Ma, Lin
    NEUROLOGICAL SCIENCES, 2019, 40 (01) : 41 - 49
  • [30] Disentangling empathy impairment along Alzheimer's disease continuum: From subjective cognitive decline to Alzheimer's dementia
    Giacomucci, Giulia
    Moschini, Valentina
    Piazzesi, Diletta
    Padiglioni, Sonia
    Caruso, Cecilia
    Nuti, Claudia
    Munarin, Alice
    Mazzeo, Salvatore
    Galdo, Giulia
    Polito, Cristina
    Emiliani, Filippo
    Frigerio, Daniele
    Morinelli, Carmen
    Bagnoli, Silvia
    Ingannato, Assunta
    Nacmias, Benedetta
    Sorbi, Sandro
    Berti, Valentina
    Bessi, Valentina
    CORTEX, 2024, 172 : 125 - 140